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NOV 27 1891 



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COPYRIGHT, I QSi 

he Yale <§r Towne Mfg. 
gYTa/aforey Conn. 



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"DesiyneA-, 
•and MadeT})?- 




■4)HIU-ADEI>PH1A- 




ARTIST 








N a most interesting address, delivered 
many years ago, upon the subject of 
the relation between the Artist and 
the Artisan, the late Cardinal Wise- 
ff man drew a graphic picture of the 
difference between the industrial art of 
f/? former times and the dilettanteism of to-day. 
As an apt illustration, he described the 
entrance of an old Roman householder into one 
of the modern museums of antiquities and curios, 
and depicted him ordering the various articles 
to be put back to their proper uses. Vases, 



urns, and other vessels of most artistic form and 
ornament, he promptly sent to the kitchen, for 
which they were intended. 






%^^u£r 



RARE mosaic pavement, which the mod- 
ern lover of art had protected with 
a heavy railing, was re-laid in the 
entrance way, to be trodden under foot 
by every passing slave, and so in turn 
each rare and beautiful object of art was dis- 
missed to some office of service in which its 
artistic side was made second- 
ary to its useful 

I fund " 

and the empty 

show-cases 

were thrown 

aside as 

useless. 




IE lesson which the wise Cardinal 
sought to teach has not been alto- 
gether lost in these later days of 
household art, and in the new 
Renaissance of true artistic taste, 
the union of artist and artisan 
and the combination of the beau- 
tiful with the useful are once more 
seen. 

Ej In a new country like our own. 
the growth of taste in househol 
r \ and the appreciation of the right use 
of art work come only with increase of 
leisure and the relaxation from daily busi- 
ness ; but, as the influence of culture, 
and travel grows daily more powerful, s6 
the great tide of public sentiment fol- 
lows the lead which only a brief time 
before seemed far in advance. 





I 



NSTKAD of looking only to art galleries and 
public collections for examples of art work, and 
being content with an occasional glimpse of 
some rare bronze or exquisite forging through 




the panels of a cabinet, the American connoisseur 
demands not only possession, but also the daily 
use of articles which a few years ago would 
have- been cherished in some museum of fine 
arts. 



7i 



E 






SPECIALLY is this true of the 
great and constantly increasing 
field of art which includes all 
forms of metal work used in house- 
hold decoration. The modern col- 
lector of the works of the modern 
artisan makes his house the cabinet 
in which these works are placed, 
and, instead of keeping them under 
glass in an art gallery, he puts them 
to their rightful use, to be seen and 
handled by all who come and go. 



r 




HE entrance door of his residence bears an 
escutcheon plate which is itself a gem of 
art work in a precious metal or fine bronze, 
while the strong yet graceful hinge-straps 
are examples at the same time of artistic 
design and skillful interpretation. 





•»h 



ASSING on through the inner door, in which 
a wrought grille of exquisite tracery is 
set, we notice the fitness with which 
all the metal is chosen to accord with the 
surroundings. The elaborate detail borne 
by the escutcheon plate of the outer doc 
is in perfect harmony with the ornate 
Renaissance work upon the capitals andi 
cornice above, while wdthin the same* 
motive is modified in treatment and fin- 
ish to harmonize with the altered condi- 
tions. Passing from room to room, the 
evidence of artistic taste is apparent, and, 
without ever becoming obtrusive, the metal 
work is everywhere seen to assert its right 
ful position as a fitting subject for treatmen 
at once appropriate and beautiful. 





S this the palace of a prince, or the home of a 
millionaire, through which we have so 
A hurriedly glanced? It is indeed a house 
*?f beautiful, but there are many other such 
y of equal beauty and yet not of extrav- 
* agant appearance. If such examples 
of the metal-worker's art can be so 
freely distributed, there must be some readier 
way of procuring them than the method which 
gave existence to the art work of the older days. 
Only king or pontiff could command the skill of 
a Benvenuto Cellini to form the mould and 
handle the graver and chasing-tools, and here 
is work which compares with that of the old 
times, on the doors and windows of residences 
and hotels, churches and business -blocks, far 
exceeding in variety and quantity the possible 
results of individual labor and skill. At the 
same time, the art metal work is in appearance 
and character so far above the so-called manu- 
factured articles that no comparison is to be 
made. 



Yet, if organized production under skillful 
supervision, with all the great advantages which 
accompany the facilities for making, handling, 
and display possessed by organization, constitute 
manufacturing, these products of the highest 
artistic merit are manufactured ; and it is the 
result of a system of manufacture which retains 
the individualism of the artist, and adds to it the 
productive capacity of a thousand artisans, 
which makes the use of modern art metal 
work a household possibility. 




If" HEN the householder of to-day 
seeks a new home, he calls 
to him the architect to 
prepare plans and eleva- 
tion, and to put into 
practical form for construction 
the ideas which he has in mind, 
and also to guide by counsel and experi- 
ence the plans which he hopes to see 
realized in the completed building. 







I 



y/f 



»Vkw *£ 



is in this work that the client 
and architect may, if they will, 
find most pleasing and con- 
genial employment, and the 
pleasure of witnessing the 
realization of the long- studied 
plans in the home where per- 
haps many coming years are 
to be spent. 

In all this work, the 
interest increases as the house 
approaches completion, and 
not the least interesting por- 
tion of the work is the selec- 
tion of the metal trimmings 
and ornament. In this branch 
of the decoration of the house, 
the new order of treatment is 
a revelation to many, and 
often the client, from lack of, 
information, fails to profit by 
what has already been done 
by specialists in art metal 
work. 



>^',&V.*« 





has no wish to turn over to the 
mechanical taste of the builder the 
selection of the metal work, which, 
though part of the useful hardware of 
the building, should be also conspicu- 
l ously a portion of its artistic decoration. 
Yet, as in the older days when art was 
truly recognized, the artistic instinct 
is to ornament in a consistent spirit the 
mechanical devices which are to be 
used for strength and security, and, 
to select such objects intelligently, a 
knowledge of mechanical excellence 
must be combined with artistic taste. 



rT is here that the systematized production 
of art metal work for household use and 
decoration, made under all the 
favorable conditions of organized man- 
ufacture, enters the field to give practi- 
cal solution to the problem of the union 
of the artist and the artisan, and it is 




by such means that the modern house beautiful 

is enabled to bear at every turn the products 

of artistic taste in bronze, or brass, or beaten 
iron. 





HE organization by which the produc- 
tion of these objects of art and use- 
fulness has been so notably advanced 
is The Yai,e & Townk Manufact- 
uring Company, and by the earnest 
and intelligent efforts of this Company 
the possibilities of art industry in metal 
work have been revealed. It is to its ware- 
rooms in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, and 
Boston that the builder of the house turns, and, 



accompanied by his architect and adviser, exam- 
ines and considers the examples from which his 
choice may be made. 




KRB are objects of art metal work in the 
schools of all times and lands : delicate 
I Byzantine tracery, bold and rugged Roman- 
esque work, or the later Gothic. The plans 
and sketches which embody the design 
for the building may here be studied 
and compared with the escutcheon plates, 

knobs, and hinge -straps which are 

i 
to be used, and , I the true consistent 

effect and bal- > ance of proportion kept 

always in sight. 




•/%>"? 



(9 



LD the building be constructed with 
all the revived classical feeling of the 
^Renaissance, here will be found plates 
and knobs exquisitely chased by the 
skillful hands of artists in metal work, 
and richly plated with silver or gold, 
while the hinge-straps retain the severe 
outline of the school, while bearing on 
their surfaces the same delicate work. 



T^KRHAPS it is a country house after the Eliza- 
w^-^ bethan time, or a Colonial mansion, for which 
the w r ork is sought, and in either case the 
cabinets will reveal examples in abounding variety 
from which selection may be made, while no 
inspection is needed to assure the critic 
that the locks and fast- 
enings for which these 
articles are adapted em- 
body the highest me- 
chanical excellence. 





*'*... 



\OT only for the outer fastenings and orna- 
ment of the building, but also for interior 
work, the same great variety of articles is 
/ made. Cabinet hinge -plates, drawer-pulls, 
and key-plates in many artistic ornamenta- 
tions are in great profusion of design and adapted 
for all situations, and the same artistic skill which 
marks the execution of the larger work is revealed 
in the smaller cabinet trimmings. 



IT is not only the metal work itself, but the 
metal work in combination with its sur- 
roundings, which must influence the choice 
of the builder of the house, and to this end the 
numerous examples are placed in appropriate 
settings by being mounted 
upon suitable panels of wood, 
with the finish best suited to 
display to highest advantage 
ination of wood and 
these cabinets of 
Jes may serve at the 
time to guide in the 
hoice both of metal 
rimmings and finish 
wood -work. 




I 



N connection with this survey of the artistic side 
of modern metal work, there is also a utilita- 
rian side to be considered ; one which is fully 
equal in importance to the former, and with 
which it is combined to form a consistent whole. 
All these varied subjects of artistic design are 
intended to be used with locks and other fasten- 
ings of security, and to this branch of the 
artisan's work have been brought care and skill 
not inferior to the art of the designer. The 
results of these efforts are the 
world-famous Yale locks, giv- 
ing such infinity of combina- 
tions and united qualities of 
greatest security and compact- 
ness that they are far in advance 
of all other locks for every purpose. 
Many forms of Yale locks have been 
designed, all of which are adapted to 
be used with the most artistic subjects 
in metal ornamentations, thus forming combina- 
tions of beauty and utility not hitherto found, 
and impossible of production elsewhere. 




p 



ROM such a tour of inspection and from 

the examination of such examples of the 

metal-worker's art, the householder returns 

to his rapidly completing dwelling with a renewed 

interest, filled with enthusiasm over the gems 

of art metal which have been spread before 

him ; and the tasteful and beautiful appearance 

of the house, whose owner has completed it with 

such an appreciation of the possibilities of art 

metal work, will bear witness to the success 

which has attended the modern union of the 

Artist and the Artisan. 

H. H. S. 





wi« ■* */ ^v Jill r* / 

3 Stamford Con rt 



I • R Ew y° RK 

R (S'MICAGO .-. I^HILADELFIilA 

O 1(c) 

j^OSTON 



Partial List 



or 



d 



p 



UMEROUS HANDSOME RESIDENCES 



K 



WHERE' OUR WORK HA5 BEEN U5ED 



Name. 
Mr. William Noble, 

Mr. William Noble, 

Dr. Baker, 

Mr. S. G. Bayne, 

Mr. W. K. Yanderbilt, 
Mr. Harvey Kennedy, 
Mr. Sidney Dillon, 

Mr. Stokes's Residence, 

Hoffman Residence, 
Mr. Robert M. Taylor, 

Mr. J. G. Prague, 
Hopper Residence, 



Architect. 
Edward Iy. Angell, 

William Baker, 

Joseph M. Dunn, 

Frank Freeman, 

Geo. A. Freeman, Jr., 
Geo. A. Freeman, Jr., 
McKim, Mead & White, 

R. H. Robertson, 

J. B. Snooks & Sons, 
J. R. Thomas, 

J. G. Prague, 
R. S. Townsend, 



Address. 

9 houses, 8th Ave., 84th 
to 85th St.. New York. 

4 houses, W. 76th St.. 
and 7 houses. W. 83d 
St., New York. 

104th St and Riverside 
Drive, New York. 

1 08th St. and Riverside 
Drive, New York. 

5th Ave., New York. 

5th Ave., New York. 

W. 57th St., New York. 

37th St. and Madison 
Ave., New York. 

W. 72d St., New York. 

59 W. 39th St., N. Y. 

4 houses, W. 86th St., 
New York. 

W. i22d St., New York. 



Name. Architect. 

Mr. Knowlton's Residence, William H. Beers, 



Mrs. Ames, 



R. B. Eastman, 



Culver Residence, Mercian Thomas, 

Brooklyn Club, Mercian Thomas, 

Mr. H.C.Hulbert's Residence, Montrose W. Morris, 



Arbuckle Residence. 

Graves Mansion, 

U. S. Grant, Jr.'s Residence 

Stephen B. Elkins's House, 

Club House, 

Col. McAlpin, 

Mr. George A. Brian, 

Glen Ridge Hall, 

Mr. W. Frazee's Residence, 

Murphy Residence, 

Captain Tarr, 

Mr. E. D. Morgan, 

Dr. Blair Thaw, 

Mr. Rollands's Residence, 

Howard Residence, 

Ross Residence, 

N. Y. Jockey Club, 

Mrs. Head's Residence, 

Mr. George H. Budlong, 

Mrs. Frederick Goodridge, 

Mr. Hamilton Fish, Jr., 

Mr. Farley Clark, 

Mr. Henry E. Hawley, 



Montrose W. Morris, 

W. A. Mundell, 

,Chas. T. Mott, 
Chas. T. Mott, 
George Tuthill, 
E. T. Hapgood, 
Wilbur S. Knowles, 
Wilbur S. Knowles, 
Wilbur S. Knowles, 
John H. Lindsley, 
Chas. D. Marvin, 
McKim, Mead & White, 
McKim, Mead & White, 
Bruce Price, 
Bruce Price, 
Bruce Price, 
Thomas R. Jackson, 
Carles F. Merry, 
George H. Budlong, 
Geo. A. Freeman, 
Geo. A. Freeman, Jr., 
Geo. A. Freeman, Jr., 
Geo. A. Freeman, Jr., 



Address. 

87 Remsen St., Brook- 
lyn, N. Y. 

Piermont St., Brook- 
lyn, N. Y. 

Washington Ave., 
Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Brooklyn, N. Y. 

9th Ave. and 1st St., 
Brooklyn, N. Y. 

317 Clinton Ave., 
Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Clinton Ave., Brook- 
lyn, N. Y. 

vSalem Centre, N. Y. 
Elkins, West Va 
Jekyl Island, Ga. 
Sing Sing, N. Y. 
AsburyParkBank,N.J. 
Glen Ridge, N. J. 
Yonkers, N. Y. 
Newark, N. J. 
Montclair, N. J. 
Wheatly, L. I. 
Piermont, N. Y. 
Tuxedo Park, N. J. 
San Mateo, Cal. 
Montreal, Canada. 
Morris Park, N. Y. 
Islip, I y . I. 
Islip, L. I. 
Riverdale, N. Y. 
Garrisons, N. Y. 
Cedarhurst, N. Y. 
Ridgefield, Conn. 



Name. 
Mr. Bernard Cohn, 
Mr. Charles Counselman, 
Mr. Max Meyer, 
Mr. H. G. Chase, 
Mr. W. F. Dunimer, 
Mr. W. A. Fuller, 
Mr. H. H. Hubbard, 
Mr. N. S. Jones, 
Mr. Chaunce}^ Keep, 
Hon. Robt. T. Lincoln, 
Mr. D. McCallay, 
Mr. S. K. Martin, 
Mr. Fred. W. Peck, 
Col. A. H. Sellers, 
Mr. H. A. Towner, 
Mr. V. C. Turner, 

Mr. Jacob Levy, 

Mr. A. Hart, 

Mr. H. C. Van Schaak, 
Mr. S. W. Yaggy, 
Mr. Thos. Chalmers, 
Mr. W. H. Evans, 
Mr. J. M. Gartside, 
Hon. Egbert Jamieson, 
Mr. E. H. Turner, 
Mr. Jas. R. Walker, 
Hon. Gwynne Garnett, 
Hon. Frank Baker, 
Mr. Geo. A. Armour, 
Mr. H. N. Higinbotham, 
Mr. C. B. McGennis, 



Architect. 

Burn ham & Root, 
Burnham & Root, 
Edbrooke & Burnham, 

W. W. Clay, 
Burnham & Root, 
W. L. B. Jenney, 



Iv. B. Dixon, 

I. A. Thain, 

W. L. B. Jenney, 

Edbrooke & Burnham, 

Burnham & Root, 

Burnham & Root, 

Wilson, Marble & 
Damson, 

Wilson, Marble & 
Lam son, 



Treat & Foltz, 
J. H. Moore, 



Holabird & Roche, 

H. D. Dean, 

Burling & Whitehouse, 

Burling & Whitehouse, 



Address. 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 

Chicago, I 

Chicago, I 

Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 
Chicago, I 



Name. 
Mr. W. K. Clow, 
Mr. F. A. Coker, 
Mr. E. S. Ishani, 
Mr. C. E. Judson, 
Mr. Hugh McBirney, 
Mr. C. B. Shourds, 
Mr. H. S. Smith, 
Mr. Geo. T. Smith. 
Mr. Thos. Murdock, 
Mr. J. D. Allen, 
Mr. A. C. Bartlett, 
Mr. Geo. B. Carpenter, 
Mr. Geo. W. Maher, 
Mr. Conrad Seipp, 
Mr. Geo. A. Weiss, 
Mr. T. S. Fauntleroy, 
Mr. W. A. Havemeyer, 
Mr. S. N. Hnrd, 
Mr. K. E. Grey, 
Mr. E. Sturtevant, 
Mr. M. S. Stearns, 
Mr. L. H. Turner, 
Dr. L. R. Williams, 
Mr. Zero Marx, 
Mr. E. Mandel, 
Mr. John Marder, 
Mr. Clinton Markell, 
Mr. Sam'l Cupples, 
Mr. I. W. Kaufman, 
Hon. S. C. Douglas, 
Mr. W. A. Wilson, 
Mr. W. S. Lawrence, 
Mr. Isaac Leisy, 



Architect. 

Beman & Parmentier. 

C. M. Palmer, 

C. S. Frost, 

Burling & Whitehouse, 

John Clifford, 

C. E. Jeunison & Co., 

C. S. Frost, 
Holabird & Roche, 



Maher & Corwin, 
A. Cudell, 
A. Cudell, 



Maher & Corwin, 
Maher & Corwin, 
Burnham & Root, 



Maher & Corwin, 

Iv. B. Dixin, 
Fred'k Perkins, 



J. M. Stewart Co., 
Edbrooke & Burnham, 
A. Mitermuller, 



Address. 

Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Chicago, 111. 
Duluth, Minn. 
St. Louis, Mo. 
vSt. Louis, Mo. 
Kansas City, Mo. 
Kansas City, Mo. 
Kalamazoo. Mich. 
Cleveland, O. 



Name. 
Mr. Geo. Faulhaber, 
Mr. W. W. Loomis, 
Mr. Geo. Mason, 
Mr. E. K. Prussing, 
Mr. Clem Studebaker, 
Hon. A. L. Conger, 
Hon. A. T. Powers, 
Mr. S. C. Gale, 
Mr. Fred. Pillsbury, 
Mr. W, W. McKnight, 
Mr. J. J. Hill, 
Mr. P. O. Yates, 
Mr. T. R. Calbraith, 
Mr. W. vS. Springer, 
Dr. Jos. Eichberg, 
Hon. J. S. Williams, 
Mr. W. W. Smith, 
Mr. W. A. Avery, 
Mr. S. O. Fisher, 
Mr. W. B. Mershon, 
Gen. R. W. Woodbury, 
Mr. Dennis Coghlin, 
Mr. E. W. Tolorton, 
Mr. Geo. H. Ketcham, 
Mr. J. G. R. McKlroy, 
University Club, 
Manufacturers Club, 
Mr. William H. Kemble, 
Mr. William I,. Elkins, 
Mr. Alan Reed (8 houses), 
Mr. Frank T. Woods, 
Dr. W. K. Brown, 
Mrs. Bonbright, 



Architect. 



Cobb & Frost, 
Willett & Pashley, 
Willett & Pashley, 



Hodson & Son, 



Cooper (Saginaw), 
Cooper, 



Brown & Day, Phila., 
Wilson Eyre, Phila., 
Hazlehurst & Huckel, 
John Windrim & Son, 
Washington B. Powell 
Brown & Day, 
Brown & Day, 

Lindley Johnson, Phila 



Address. 
Cleveland, O. 
Council Bluffs. 
Lake Villa, Wis. 
Highland Park, 111. 
South Bend, Ind. 
Akron, O. 
Helena, Mont. 
Minneapolis, Minn. 
Minneapolis, Minn. 
Minneapolis, Minn. 
St. Paul, Minn. 
Omaha, Neb. 
Louisville, Ky. 
Cincinnati, O. 
Cincinnati, O. 
Columbus, O. 
Dayton, O. 
Detroit, Mich. 
Bay City, Mich. 
Saginaw, Mich. 
Denver, Col. 
Toledo, O. 
Toledo, O. 
Toledo, O. 
Philadelphia. 
Philadelphia. 
Philadelphia. 
Philadelphia. 
Philadelphia. 
Philadelphia. 
Philadelphia. 
Philadelphia. 
, Wynnewood, Pa. 



Name. 
Mrs. Baird, 
Mr. Henry P. Dixon, 
Mr. Henry Tetlow, 
Mr. Herman Lewis, 
Dr. Stranahan, 
Mr. G. G. Green, 
Mr. Samuel E. Stokes, 
W. R. Kenney, 

Mr. A. S. Asberry, 

Mr. W. E. Breeze, 
Mrs. C. G. Mitchell, 
Mrs. Harrison Phoebus, 
Phoenix Club, 

Mr. R. C. Hooper, 

Mr. R. D. Andrews, 

Mr. H. M. Biglow, 

Mr. W. M. Burr, 

Mr. Chas. P. Searle, 

Mr. Asa Potter, 
Mr. Willard White, 
Mr. H. H. Reed, 
Mr. A. D. Clanin, 
Mrs. R. B. Sherman, 
Dr. Homan's Apartment 
House, 

Mr. S. W. Mead, 

Mr. John Stetson, 

Mr. George H. Tinkham, 

Mr. C. S. Andrews, 



Architect. 
Benj. Linfoot, Phila., 

T. Lonsdale, Phila., 



Major Harrison Waite, 

W. P. Tinsley, Lynch- 
burg, 



Chas. Carson, Baltimore, 

Andrews, Jacques & 
Rantoul, 

Andrews, Jacques & 
Rantoul, 

Andrews, Jacques & 
Rantoul, 

J. Whitney Lewis, 

Shepley, Rutan & 
Coolidge, 

W. Ralph Emerson, 

W. H. Besarick, 

S. J. Brown, 

S. J. Brown, 

S. J. Brown, 



Address. 
Merion, Pa. 
Wallingford, Pa. 
Germantown, Pa. 
Green Lane Pa. 
Erie, Pa. 

Drakesville, N. J. 
Atlantic City, N. J. 
Petersburg, Va. 

Roanoke, Va. 

Asheville, N. C. 
Asheville, N. C. 
Old Point Comfort, Va. 
Baltimore, Md. 

Boston, Mass. 

Boston, Mass. 

Boston, Mass. 

Boston, Mass. 

Boston, Mass. 

Boston, Mass. 
Boston, Mass. 
Boston, Mass. 
Boston, Mass. 
Boston, Mass. 



McKim Mead & White, Boston, Mass. 

Cabot, Everett & Mead, Boston, Mass. 
S. D. Kelley, Boston, Mass. 

W. H. Besarick, Boston, Mass. 

Andrews, Jacques & 
Rantoul, 



Boston, Mass. 



Name. 
Mr. H. D. Xerxa, 
Prof. W. H. Tillinghast, 
Mr. W. I. Bowditch, 
Mr. J. Story Smith. 
Mr. C. H. Blackall, 
Mr. George W. Taylor, 
Mr. H. M. Taylor, 

Mr. Eugene R. Knapp, 

Mr. Eugene R. Knapp, 

Mr. Eugene R. Knapp, 

Mr. Burpe Rumsey, 

Mr. A. W. Nickerson, 

Mr. J. N. White, 
Mrs. E. T. Wood, 
Mr. W. J. Merritt, 

Mr. Chester W. Bliss, 

Mr. W. H. Bent, 
Mr. H. B. Griffin, 
Mr. F. J. Mitchell, 
Mr. B. O. Peabody, 
Mr. P. C. Swetts, 
Mrs. Gertrude Brewster, 
Mr. A. H. Jennings, 
Mr. George A. U.oyd, 

Rev. Dr. Robinson, 

Mr. Roland C. Nickerson, 

Mr. E. W. Cross, 



Architect. 

Hartwell & Richardson, 

C. H. Blackall, 

C. H. Blackall, 

C. H. Blackall, 

C. H. Blackall, 

Rand & Taylor, 

Rand & Ta\ T lor, 

Richter Terrace, 
Fehmer & Page, 

Filmore Terrace, 
Fehmer & Page, 

Marguerite Terrace, 
Fehmer & Page, 

James T. Kelley, 

Shepley, Rutan & 
Coolidge, 

Fuller & Delano, 

Allen & Kenway, 

Hartwell & Richardson, 

Gardner, Pyne & Gard- 
ner, 

A. E. Swazy, 

Perkins & Bancroft, 

Perkins & Bancroft, 

Perkins & Bancroft, 

Perkins & Bancroft, 

S. J. Brown, 

Perkins & Bancroft, 

F. I,. Smith, 

Gardner, Pyne & Gard- 
ner, 

F. E. Zarrahn, 

Stone, Carpenter & 
Wilson, 



Address. 

Cambridge, Mass. 
Cambridge, Mass. 
Brookline, Mass. 
Brookline, Mass, 
Brookline, Mass. 
Brookline, Mass. 
Brookline, Mass. 

Brookline, Mass. 

Brookline, Mass. 

Brookline, Mass. 

D/ynn, Mass. 

Dedham, Mass. 

Winchendon, Mass. 
Springfield, Mass. 
Springfield, Mass. 

Springfield, Mass. 

Taunton, Mass. 
Haverhill, Mass. 
Haverhill, Mass. 
Haverhill, Mass. 
Haverhill, Mass. 
Dorchester, Mass. 
Haverhill, Mass. 
Arlington, Mass. 

Chicopee, Mass. 

East Brewster, Mass 

Narragansett Pier. 



Name. 
Wanisutta Club, 

Col. McManus, 

Mr. S. O. Metcalf, 

Mr. James A. Potter, 

Mr. L. B. Mason, 

Mr. A: J. Daniels, 

Mr. James Fletcher, 

Mr. E). D. Pearce, 
Mr. W..I. Gammell, 
Mr. Fred. W. Vanderbilt, 
Mr. W. I.'Gammell, 
Mrs. K. G. Tewksbury, 
Mrs. Dr. J.W. Pitman, 
Mr. Joshua- Drummond, Jr. 
Mr. K. A. Thomas, 
Hon. H. D. Hayden, 



Architect. 

Andrews, Jacques & 
Rantoul, 

Stone, Carpenter & 
Wilson, 

Stone, Carpenter & 
Wilson, 

Stone, Carpenter & 
Wilson, 

Stone, Carpenter & 
Wilson, 

Stone, Carpenter & 
Wilson, 

Stone, Carpenter & 
Wilson, 

Rotch & Tilden, 

Gould & Angel, 

R. M. Hunt, 

Peabody & Stearns, 

. Unknown, 

W. R. Walker & Son, 

John Calvin Stevens, 

F. M. Hughes, 

K. A. P. Newcomb, 



Address. 

New Bedford, Mass. 
Providence, R. I. 
Providence, R. I. 
Providence, R. I. 
Providence, R. I. 
Providence, R. I. 

Providence, R. I. 

Providence, R. I. 
Providence, R. I. 
Newport, R. I. 
Newport, R.I. 
Manchester, N. H. 
No. Conway, N. H. 
Portland, Me. 
Milford, Mass. 
Woburn, Mass. 



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